Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to welcome everybody here again, on behalf of my riding of Prince Albert. Believe it or not, even though we're in Saskatchewan, the oil sands impact us hugely.
The city of Prince Albert had its pulp mill shut down a few years ago. I think most of those employees were absorbed into the oil sands, but their families stayed in my riding. They stayed in Prince Albert; they wanted to raise their families there. They do the week in or two weeks out.
You've been very flexible in allowing employees to create a structure that works for their family needs plus their employment needs.
You talked about education and employment and getting skilled workers. One of the things we're doing out of Cumberland College is just that. We're doing it with aboriginal workers, bringing in the kids who are coming out of the reserves of the north and teaching them construction tools. By tools, I mean the big trucks, the graders—the heavy equipment stuff.
What type of other training are you providing or looking at for skills as new developments come forward? Are we going to see the proper type of education coming out of the universities? Are we seeing the proper kind of education coming out of the trade schools? As we go forward, we're going to see more and more complex ideas possibly being formulated. Do we have the skill sets to handle that?